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3/6/2018 Western Institute of Technology Inc vs Salas : 113032 : J.

Hermosisima, Jr : First Division

FIRST DIVISION

[G.R. No. 113032. August 21, 1997]

WESTERN INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY, INC., HOMERO L. VILLASIS, DIMAS


ENRIQUEZ, PRESTON F. VILLASIS & REGINALD F. VILLASIS, petitioners,
vs. RICARDO T. SALAS, SOLEDAD SALAS-TUBILLEJA, ANTONIO S.
SALAS, RICHARD S. SALAS & HON. JUDGE PORFIRIO PARIAN,
respondents.

DECISION
HERMOSISIMA, JR., J.:

Up for review on certiorari are: (1) the Decision September 6, 1993 and (2) the order dated
November 23, 1993 of Branch 33 of the Regional Trial Court of Iloilo City in Criminal Cases Nos.
37097 and 37098 for estafa and falsification of a public document, respectively. The judgment
acquitted the private respondents of both charges, but petitioners seek to hold them civilly liable.
Private respondents Ricardo T. Salas, Salvador T. Salas, Soledad Salas-Tubilleja, Antonio S.
Salas, and Richard S. Salas, belonging to the same family, are the majority and controlling members
of the Board of Trustees of Western Institute of Technology, Inc. (WIT, for short), a stock corporation
engaged in the operation, among others, of an educational institution. According to petitioners, the
minority stockholders of WIT, sometime on June 1, 1986 in the principal office of WIT at La Paz, Iloilo
City, a Special Board meeting was held. In attendance were other members of the Board including
one of the petitioners Reginald Villasis. Prior to aforesaid Special Board Meeting, copies of notice
thereof, dated May 24, 1986, were distributed to all Board Members. The notice allegedly indicated
that the meeting to be held on June 1, 1986 included item No. 6 which states:

"Possible implementation of Art. III, Sec. 6 of the Amended By-Laws of Western Institute of Technology, Inc.
on compensation of all officers of the corporation." [1]

In said meeting, the Board of Trustees passed Resolution No. 48, s. 1986, granting monthly
compensation to the private respondents as corporate officers retroactive June 1, 1985, viz.:

Resolution No. 48 s. 1986

On the motion of Mr. Richard Salas (accused), duly seconded by Mrs. Soledad Tubilleja (accused), it was
unanimously resolved that:

The Officers of the Corporation be granted monthly compensation for services rendered as follows: Chairman -
P9,000.00/month, Vice-Chairman - P3,500.00/month, Corporate Treasurer - P3,500.00/month and Corporate
Secretary - P3,500.00/month, retroactive June 1, 1985 and the ten percentum of the net profits shall be
distributed equally among the ten members of the Board of Trustees. This shall amend and superceed(sic) any
previous resolution.

There were no other business.

The Chairman declared the meeting adjourned at 5:11 P.M.

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This is to certify that the foregoing minutes of the regular meeting of the Board of Trustees of Western Institute
of Technology, Inc. held on March 30, 1986 is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and belief.

(Sgd) ANTONIO S. SALAS


Corporate Secretary[2]

A few years later, that is, on March 13, 1991, petitioners Homero Villasis, Preston Villasis,
Reginald Villasis and Dimas Enriquez filed an affidavit-complaint against private respondents before
the Office of the City Prosecutor of Iloilo, as a result of which two (2) separate criminal informations,
one for falsification of a public document under Article 171 of the Revised Penal Code and the other
for estafa under Article 315, par. 1(b) of the RPC, were filed before Branch 33 of the Regional Trial
Court of Iloilo City. The charge for falsification of public document was anchored on the private
respondents submission of WITs income statement for the fiscal year 1985-1986 with the Securities
and Exchange Commission (SEC) reflecting therein the disbursement of corporate funds for the
compensation of private respondents based on Resolution No. 4, series of 1986, making it appear that
the same was passed by the board on March 30, 1986, when in truth, the same was actually passed
on June 1, 1986, a date not covered by the corporations fiscal year 1985-1986 (beginning May 1,
1985 and ending April 30, 1986). The information for falsification of a public document states:

The undersigned City Prosecutor accuses RICARDO T. SALAS, SALVADOR T. SALAS, SOLEDAD SALAS-
TUBILLEJA, ANTONIO S. SALAS and RICHARD S. SALAS (whose dates and places of birth cannot be
ascertained) of the crime of FALSIFICATION OF A PUBLC DOCUMENT, Art. 171 of the Revised Penal
Code, committed as follows:

That on or about the 10th day of June, 1986, in the City of Iloilo, Philippines and within the jurisdiction of this
Honorable Court, the above-named accused, being then the Chairman, Vice-Chairman, Treasurer, Secretary and
Trustee (who later became the secretary), respectively, of the board of trustees of the Western Institute of
Technology, Inc., a corporation duly organized and existing under the laws of the Republic of the Philippines,
conspiring and confederating together and mutually helping one another, to better realized (sic) their purpose,
did then and there wilfully, unlawfully and criminally prepare and execute and subsequently cause to be
submitted to the Securities and Exchange Commission an income statement of the corporation for the fiscal year
1985-1986, the same being required to be submitted every end of the corporation fiscal year by the aforesaid
Commission and therefore, a public document, including therein the disbursement of the retroactive
compensation of accused corporate officers in the amount of P186,470.70, by then and there making it appear
that the basis thereof Resolution No. 4, Series of 1986 was passed by the board of trustees on March 30, 1986, a
date covered by the corporations fiscal year 1985-1986 (i.e., from May 1, 1985 to April 30, 1986), when in truth
and in fact, as said accused well knew, no such Resolution No. 48, Series of 1986 was passed on March 30,
1986.

CONTRARY TO LAW.

Iloilo City, Philippines, November 22,1991.[3] [Underscoring ours].

The Information, on the other hand, for estafa reads:

The undersigned City Prosecutor accuses RICARDO SALAS, SALVADOR T. SALAS, SOLEDAD SALAS-
TUBILLEJA, ANTONIO S. SALAS, RICHARD S. SALAS (whose dates and places of birth cannot be
ascertained) of the crime of ESTAFA, Art. 315, par 1(b) of the Revised Penal Code, committed as follows:

That on or about the 1st day of June, 1986, in the City of Iloilo, Philippines and within the jurisdiction of this
Honorable Court, the above-named accused, being then the Chairman, Vice-Chairman, Treasurer, Secretary and
Trustee (who later became the secretary), respectively, of the board of trustees of the Western Institute of
Technology, Inc., a corporation duly organized and existing under the laws of the Republic of the Philippines,
conspiring and confederating together and mutually helping one another, to better realize their purpose, did then

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and there wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously defraud the said corporation (and its stockholders) in the
following manner, to wit: herein accused, knowing fully well that they have no sufficient, lawful authority to
disburse--- let alone violation of applicable laws and jurisprudence, disbursed the funds of the corporation by
effecting payment of their retroactive salaries in the amount of P186,470.70 and subsequently paying themselves
every 15th and 30th of the month starting June 15, 1986 until the present, in the amount of P19,500.00 per
month, as if the same were their own, and when herein accused were informed of the illegality of these
disbursements by the minority stockholders by way of objections made in an annual stockholders meeting held
on June 14, 1986 and every year thereafter, they refused, and still refuse, to rectify the same to the damage and
prejudice of the corporation (and its stockholders) in the total sum of P1,453,970.79 as of November 15, 1991.

CONTRARY TO LAW.

Iloilo City, Philippines, November 22,1991.[4] [Underscoring ours]

Thereafter, trial for the two criminal cases, docketed as Criminal Cases Nos. 37097 and 37098,
was consolidated. After a full-blown hearing, Judge Porfirio Parian handed down a verdict of acquittal
on both counts[5] dated September 6, 1993 without imposing any civil liability against the accused
therein.
Petitioners filed a Motion for Reconsideration[6] of the civil aspect of the RTC Decision which was,
however, denied in an Order dated November 23, 1993.[7]
Hence, the instant petition.
Significantly on December 8, 1994, a Motion for Intervention, dated December 2, 1994, was filed
before this Court by Western Institute of Technology, Inc., supposedly one of the petitioners herein,
disowning its inclusion in the petition and submitting that Atty. Tranquilino R. Gale, counsel for the
other petitioners, had no authority whatsoever to represent the corporation in filing the petition.
Intervenor likewise prayed for the dismissal of the petition for being utterly without merit. The Motion
for Intervention was granted on January 16, 1995.[8]
Petitioners would like us to hold private respondents civilly liable despite their acquittal in Criminal
Cases Nos. 37097 and 37098. They base their claim on the alleged illegal issuance by private
respondents of Resolution No. 48, series of 1986 ordering the disbursement of corporate funds in the
amount of P186,470.70 representing the retroactive compensation as of June 1, 1985 in favor of
private respondents, board members of WIT, plus P1,453,970.79 for the subsequent collective
salaries of private respondent every 15th and 30th of the month until the filing of the criminal complaints
against them on March 1991. Petitioners maintain that this grant of compensation to private
respondents is proscribed under Section 30 of the Corporation Code. Thus, private respondents are
obliged to return these amounts to the corporation with interest.
We cannot sustain the petitioners. The pertinent section of the Corporation Code provides:

Sec. 30. Compensation of directors.--- In the absence of any provision in the by-laws fixing their compensation,
the directors shall not receive any compensation, as such directors, except for reasonable per diems: Provided,
however, That any such compensation (other than per diems) may be granted to directors by the vote of the
stockholders representing at least a majority of the outstanding capital stock at a regular or special stockholders
meeting. In no case shall the total yearly compensation of directors, as such directors, exceed ten (10%) percent
of the net income before income tax of the corporation during the preceding year. [Underscoring ours]

There is no argument that directors or trustees, as the case may be, are not entitled to salary or
other compensation when they perform nothing more than the usual and ordinary duties of their office.
This rule is founded upon a presumption that directors /trustees render service gratuitously and that
the return upon their shares adequately furnishes the motives for service, without compensation[9]
Under the foregoing section, there are only two (2) ways by which members of the board can be
granted compensation apart from reasonable per diems: (1) when there is a provision in the by-laws
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fixing their compensation; and (2) when the stockholders representing a majority of the outstanding
capital stock at a regular or special stockholders meeting agree to give it to them.
This proscription, however, against granting compensation to directors/trustees of a corporation is
not a sweeping rule. Worthy of note is the clear phraseology of Section 30 which states: xxx [T]he
directors shall not receive any compensation, as such directors, xxx. The phrase as such directors is
not without significance for it delimits the scope of the prohibition to compensation given to them for
services performed purely in their capacity as directors or trustees. The unambiguous implication is
that members of the board may receive compensation, in addition to reasonable per diems, when they
render services to the corporation in a capacity other than as directors/trustees.[10] In the case at
bench, Resolution No. 48, s. 1986 granted monthly compensation to private respondents not in their
capacity as members of the board, but rather as officers of the corporation, more particularly as
Chairman, Vice-Chairman, Treasurer and Secretary of Western Institute of Technology. We quote
once more Resolution No. 48, s. 1986 for easy reference, viz.:

Resolution No. 48 s. 1986

On the motion of Mr. Richard Salas (accused), duly seconded by Mrs. Soledad Tubilleja (accused), it was
unanimously resolved that:

The Officers of the Corporation be granted monthly compensation for services rendered as follows: Chairman -
P9,000.00/month, Vice-Chairman - P3,500.00/month, Corporate Treasurer - P3,500.00/month and Corporate
Secretary - P3,500.00/month, retroactive June 1, 1985 and the ten percentum of the net profits shall be
distributed equally among the ten members of the Board of Trustees. This shall amend and superceed(sic) any
previous resolution.

There were no other business.

The Chairman declared the meeting adjourned at 5:11 P.M.

This is to certify that the foregoing minutes of the regular meeting of the Board of Trustees of Western Institute
of Technology, Inc. held on March 30, 1986 is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and belief.

(Sgd) ANTONIO S. SALAS


Corporate Secretary[11] [Underscoring ours]

Clearly, therefore , the prohibition with respect to granting compensation to corporate


directors/trustees as such under Section 30 is not violated in this particular case. Consequently, the
last sentence of Section 30 which provides:

xxx xxx. In no case shall the total yearly compensation of directors, as such directors, exceed ten (10%) percent
of the net income before income tax of the corporation during the preceding year. [Underscoring ours]

does not likewise find application in this case since the compensation is being given to private
respondents in their capacity as officers of WIT and not as board members.
Petitioners assert that the instant case is a derivative suit brought by them as minority
shareholders of WIT for and on behalf of the corporation to annul Resolution No. 48, s. 1986 which is
prejudicial to the corporation.
We are unpersuaded. A derivative suit is an action brought by minority shareholders in the name
of the corporation to redress wrongs committed against it, for which the directors refuse to sue.[12] It is
a remedy designed by equity and has been the principal defense of the minority shareholders against
abuses by the majority.[13] Here, however, the case is not a derivative suit but is merely an appeal on
the civil aspect of Criminal Cases Nos. 37097 and 37098 filed with the RTC of Iloilo for estafa and
falsification of public document. Among the basic requirements for a derivative suit to prosper is that
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the minority shareholder who is suing for and on behalf of the corporation must allege his complaint
before the proper forum that he is suing on a derivative cause of action on behalf of the corporation
and all other shareholders similarly situated who wish to join.[14] This is necessary to vest jurisdiction
upon the tribunal in line with the rule that it is the allegations in the complaint that vests jurisdiction
upon the court or quasi-judicial body concerned over the subject matter and nature of the action.[15]
This was not complied with by the petitioners either in their complaint before the court a quo nor in the
instant petition which, in part, merely states that this is a petition for review on certiorari on pure
questions of law to set aside a portion of the RTC decision in Criminal Cases Nos. 37097 and
37098[16] since the trial courts judgment of acquittal failed to impose any civil liability against the
private respondents. By no amount of equity considerations, if at all deserved, can a mere appeal on
the civil aspect of a criminal case be treated as a derivative suit.
Granting, for purposes of discussion, that this is a derivative suit as insisted by petitioners, which it
is not, the same is outrightly dismissible for having been wrongfully filed in the regular court devoid of
any jurisdiction to entertain the complaint. The case should have been filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission (SEC) which exercises original and exclusive jurisdiction over derivative suits,
they being intra-corporate disputes, per Section 5(b) of P.D. No. 902-A:

In addition to the regulatory and adjudicative functions of the Securities and Exchange Commission over
corporations, partnerships and other forms of associations registered with it as expressly granted under existing
laws and decrees, it shall have original and exclusive jurisdiction to hear and decide cases involving:

xxx xxx xxx

b) Controversies arising out of intra-corporate or partnership relations, between and among stockholders,
members, or associates; between any or all of them and the corporation, partnership or association of which they
are stockholders, members or associates, respectively; and between such corporation, partnership or association
and the State insofar as it concerns their individual franchise or right to exist as such entity;

xxx xxx xxx. [Underscoring ours]


Once the case is decided by the SEC, the losing party may file a petition for review before the Court of
Appeals raising questions of fact, of law, or mixed questions of fact and law.[17] It is only after the case
has ran this course, and not earlier, can it be brought to us via a petition for review on certiorari under
Rule 45 raising only pure questions of law.[18] Petitioners, in pleading that we treat the instant petition
as a derivative suit, are trying to short-circuit the entire process which we cannot here sanction.
As an appeal on the civil aspect of Criminal Cases Nos. 37097 and 37098 for falsification of public
document and estafa, which this petition truly is, we have to deny the petition just the same. It will be
well to quote the respondent courts ratiocinations acquitting the private respondents on both counts:

The prosecution wants this Court to believe and agree that there is falsification of public document because, as
claimed by the prosecution, Resolution No. 48, Series of 1986 (Exh. 1-E-1) was not taken up and passed during
the Regular Meeting of the Board of Trustees of the western Institute of Technology (WIT), Inc. on March 30,
1986, but on June 1, 1986 special meeting of the same board of trustees.

This Court is reluctant to accept this claim of falsification. The prosecution omitted to submit the complete
minutes of the regular meeting of the Board of Trustees on March 30, 1986. It only presented in evidence Exh. C,
which is page 5 or the last page of the said minutes. Had the complete minutes (Exh. 1 consisting of five (5)
pages, been submitted, it can readily be seen and understood that Resolution No. 48, Series of 1986 (Exh. 1-E-1)
giving compensation to corporate officers, was indeed included in Other Business, No. 6 of the Agenda, and was
taken up and passed on March 30, 1986. The mere fact of existence of Exh. C also proves that it was passed on
March 30, 1986 for Exh,. C is a part and parcel of the whole minutes of the Board of Trustees Regular Meeting
on March 30, 1986. No better and more credible proof can be considered other than the Minutes (Exh. 1) itself
of the Regular Meeting of the Board of Trustees on March 30, 1986. The imputation that said Resolution No.48

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was neither taken up nor passed on March 30, 1986 because the matter regarding compensation was not
specifically stated or written in the Agenda and that the words possible implementation of said Resolution No.
48, was expressly written in the Agenda for the Special Meeting of the Board on June 1, 1986, is simply an
implication. This evidence by implication to the mind of the court cannot prevail over the Minutes (Exh. 1) and
cannot ripen into proof beyond reasonable doubt which is demanded in all criminal prosecutions.

This Court finds that under the Eleventh Article (Exh. 3-D-1) of the Articles of Incorporation (Exh. 3-B) of the
Panay Educational Institution, Inc., now the Western Institute of Technology, Inc., the officers of the corporation
shall receive such compensation as the Board of Directors may provide. These Articles of Incorporation was
adopted on May 17, 1957 (Exh. 3-E). The Officers of the corporation and their corresponding duties are
enumerated and stated in Sections 1, 2, 3 and 4 of Art. III of the Amended By-Laws of the Corporation (Exh. 4-
A) which was adopted on May 31, 1957. According to Sec. 6, Art. III of the same By-Laws, all officers shall
receive such compensation as may be fixed by the Board of Directors.

It is the perception of this Court that the grant of compensation or salary to the accused in their capacity as
officers of the corporation, through Resolution No. 48, enacted on March 30, 1986 by the Board of Trustees, is
authorized by both the Articles of Incorporation and the By-Laws of the Corporation. To state otherwise is to
depart from the clear terms of the said articles and by-laws. In their defense the accused have properly and
rightly asserted that the grant of salary is not for directors, but for their being officers of the corporation who
oversee the day to day activities and operations of the school.

xxx xxx xxx

xxx [O]n the question of whether or not the accused can be held liable for estafa under Sec. 1 (b) of Art. 315 of
the Revised Penal Code, it is perceived by this Court that the receipt and the holding of the money by the
accused as salary on basis of the authority granted by the Articles and By-Laws of the corporation are not
tainted with abuse of confidence. The money they received belongs to them and cannot be said to have been
converted and/or misappropriated by them.

xxx xxx xxx.[19] [Underscoring ours]


From the foregoing factual findings, which we find to be amply substantiated by the records, it is
evident that there is simply no basis to hold the accused, private respondents herein, civilly liable.
Section 2(b) of Rule 111 on the New Rules on Criminal Procedure provides:

SEC. 2. Institution of separate civil action.

xxx xxx xxx

(b) Extinction of the penal action does not carry with it extinction of the civil, unless the extinction proceeds
from a declaration in a final judgment that the fact from which the civil might arise did not exist. [Underscoring
ours]

Likewise, the last paragraph of Section 2, Rule 120 reads:

SEC. 2. Form and contents of judgment.

xxx xxx xxx

In case of acquittal, unless there is a clear showing that the act from which the civil liability might arise did not
exist, the judgment shall make a finding on the civil liability of the accused in favor of the offended party.
[Underscoring ours]

The acquittal in Criminal Cases Nos. 37097 and 37098 is not merely based on reasonable doubt
but rather on a finding that the accused-private respondents did not commit the criminal acts
complained of. Thus, pursuant to the above rule and settled jurisprudence, any civil action ex delicto
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cannot prosper. Acquittal in a criminal action bars the civil action arising therefrom where the judgment
of acquittal holds that the accused did not commit the criminal acts imputed to them.[20]
WHEREFORE, the instant petition is hereby DENIED with costs against petitioners.
SO ORDERED.
Padilla, (Chairman), Bellosillo, Vitug, and Kapunan, JJ., concur.

[1] Annex E; Rollo, p. 92.


[2] Annex F; Rollo, p. 93.
[3] Annex V; Rollo, p. 237.
[4] Annex U; Rollo, p. 64.
[5] Decision, p. 11; Rollo, p. 64.
[6] Annex B; Rollo, p. 66.
[7] Rollo, p. 87.
[8] Rollo, p. 403.
[9] Agbayani, Aguedo F., Commentaries and Jurisprudence on the Commercial Laws of the Philippines, Vol. 3, 1988 ed., p.
259.
[10] Ibid.
[11] Annex F; Rollo, p. 93.
[12] Agbayani, supra., p. 540.
[13] Commart (Phils.) Inc. v. Securities and Exchange Commission, 198 SCRA 73, 80 [1991].
[14] Agbayani, supra., p. 543.
[15] See Sarmiento v. Court of Appeals, 250 SCRA 108 [1995]; De Leon v. Court of Appeals, 245 SCRA 166 [1995]; Alleje
v. Court of Appeals, 240 SCRA 495 [1995].
[16] Petition, p. 6; Rollo, p. 13.
[17] Sections 1 & 3, Circular No. 1-91; Sections 1 &3, Revised Administrative Circular No. 1-95; Now incorporated in
Sections 1 & 3, Rule 43 of the 1997 Rules of Civil Procedure.
[18] Section 1, Rule 45.
[19] Decision, pp. 9-11; Rollo, pp. 62-64.
[20] Regalado, Florenz D., Remedial Law Compendium, Vol. II, 1995 ed., p. 287, citing Tan v. Standard Vacuum Oil Co., 91
Phil. 672.

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